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Grow a Garden!

A man gave his town some land. He had one requirement: The land had to be made into a community garden.
A branch from an orchard apple tree is filled with red apples and other apple trees are in the background.

© tstock/stock.adobe.com

Michel Éprinchard’s land will eventually become an orchard like the one in this photo.

An empty field can become many things. Plant some seeds, and you may end up with enough food to feed a village! 

Growing up, Michel Éprinchard loved to explore his family’s land in the French town of Clussais-la-Pommeraie. But when he grew up and the land became his, he didn’t know what to do with it. It grew nothing but weeds. Then he got an idea. Why not give the land to the town and ask that it be used to grow food for the community?

Éprinchard made a deal with the town government. He would give the land to the town if the government turned it into a garden and orchard that all the residents could use. The project would cost about $12,000. 

“The first [requirement] is to create a garden with specific varieties of fruit trees,” Éprinchard told Franceinfo. “The second [requirement]…is that the entire community can benefit from it, shared among all.”

Town mayor Étienne Fouché accepted the deal. Planting began last year, with many residents volunteering to help transform the field into an orchard—a place where fruit trees grow. By early 2026, there were 50 saplings, or baby trees. Eventually, there will be nearly 100 trees, plus flowers and more. There will even be an area where people just hang out and enjoy the fresh air.

“There are apple trees, pear trees, and plum trees,” Mayor Fouché said. It will take about four years for the trees to start bearing fruit. In the meantime, the town is working hard to keep them healthy, knowing there will eventually be a sweet reward.

 “Now we will let them grow,” said Mayor Fouché. “We will monitor the diseases, we will take care of the soil, and then people will come to pick their own apples or make jam.”

What Community Gardens Can Give
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Fun Fact!

Four varieties of apples are in round red baskets at a market.

© mbruxelle/stock.adobe.com

What’s a Cosmic Crisp or a Granny Smith? They’re both types of apples! There are more than 7,500 kinds of apples in the world.

Apples Spread By Accident!

Illustrations of apples start around central Asia and proliferate on a map that shows the sea and land routes of the Silk Road.

© Lena Palamarchuk/stock.adobe.com; Photo illustration Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Apples first grew in central Asia and then spread east and west along the Silk Road.

Have you ever heard of the Silk Road? This was the name of a network of trade routes that stretched from Asia to Europe beginning about 2,000 years ago. Silk made its way from China to Europe along the Silk Road, and wool and gold moved east from Europe and Africa to Asia. The Silk Road was active until the Middle Ages.

Surprisingly, we can thank the Silk Road for the spread of apples!

Ancient Apples

The very first version of a modern apple grew in central Asia. Those first apples didn’t taste very good compared to the apples we know. They were softer and had less flavor.

Creating New Apples by Accident

Over time, the apples spread both west and east, thanks to traders who snacked on them as they traveled. Researchers say the traders either planted the seeds or dropped the apple cores on the ground. Either way, the seeds got planted. The ancient apples must have accidentally crossed breeds with a small, hard fruit called a crabapple, which grew in Europe and eastern Asia. Over time, firmer and more sour apples grew on both continents.

Today, you can find apples that taste tart, sweet, and everything in between. That’s because growers have developed thousands of new varieties of one of the world’s favorite fruits.

Bats Help Make Our Food

A bat hovers in the air as it drinks nectar from a flower in front of a dark background.

© FotoRequest/stock.adobe.com

Bats, like this one in Costa Rica, spread pollen as they visit flowers to drink nectar.

Bats may be most famous for sleeping upside down, but did you know that they are pollinators? While bees pollinate many apple trees, bats in warm parts of the world help make sure we have tropical fruits like mangoes and guavas.

You can learn more about bats at Britannica!

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WHAT'S THE WORD?

reap

Part of speech:

verb

Definition:

: to get (something, such as a reward) as a result of something that you have done

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How to Cite This Page

Here is how to cite this page using the MLA style. While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some differences. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.

“In the News: Grow a Garden.” Britannica School, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 5Apr. 2026. https://news.eb.com/level1/grow-a-garden. Accessed 6 Apr. 2026 [Replace this date with today’s date.]